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legal notices. IN I'KOBATK Manitowoc CopWT OoraT. 1 In tho mat tor of the ostato <>f Miouaol Mullins deceased. a T<> all whom it may concern. letters testatmentarv <>n said estate of Michael Mullins having leen issued to William Mullins on the Oth day of January A D. T.l and six months from and after said day l-eimt allowed and limited for creditors to present their claims for examination ami allowance, notice is herein-{iven that the undersigned will, cn the flrst'Tuesdavs of June and July A 1> iww at the Prelude Office in thefityof Manitowoc, in said Count v recidve. examine and adjust all claims and demands of all js*rs uia against said deceased. Dated January 0. HUB, , . j< >HN CHLOITEK, County Judge. j s Anderson, Atorney. Publish Jan. S, 15. 38. Classified Ads. M. E. BAHR, I). 0. Osteopathic Treatments Given Rheumatism and Chronic Diseases. Consultation free. Calls made. Ger man spoken. Honrs—lo to 12. 2t > • r ). 7to Oyer Schmidtman’s store. Manitowoc. THE NATIONAL BANK. Manitowoc, Wisconsin. CAPITAL SIOO,OOO. SAVINGS DEPARTMENT. L. D MOPES. President, LEANDER CHOATE. Vice-President FRED T. ZENTNER. Cashier F< )R SALE A three horse power engine and boiler. Just the thing for a small shop or fora farmer who wants a small power and a boiler that can be used for a steam cooker, water heater or other purises Will lie sold cheap. Apply at the Pilot office. HOYER BROTHERS MERCHANT TAILORS. M ANIT< JWOC WIHCONSIN Dont Be Fooled? @The markrt I* being flooded with worthless Imitations o' ROCKY MOUNTAIN To protect the public we call especial attention too'ir trait' mark, printed on every pack age. Demand the genuine. For Sale by all Druggists MW CHICHtSTf R’S ENGLISH Pennyroyal pills I Original •in) Only Ornnloe. f ' HAKK, * i" l.ndlrs, k-k Ortrrlat / ♦( (1.-u r.r < III! HI STICK S i:N(fI.ISII In Id II aul I.oM in* a Ik U*i •rani rv —*ui • uinMi. n I itke nu alhrr. Kifuaa TkJ IlMDgr rtiua *• uDa l ll u 1 1'na url I (Y tin**' Huy of y"jr lru<f.-t *r srn-l !•. k I W a p far I’nrtlt-iilnra. I#• lm<iiill V *C* I? *nd ** Ilfllrf for I .ndlrn.** n lent hy pr y turn VI all. I 0.000 T. ailtiH.r.iai* * Ihy v —■*"' i a I>rug( 'a I lilt hralrr < hcrnlral I o. t Mention tMa paper Afadlfton *guarr, I*lll 1.A., I*A. PLENTY OF LEMON JUICE. If EaUeii In \liinilniiee II I* n Sure ( nre fur That 'Terrible H In- n ina Ha in. The idea of treating rheumatism with lemon juice appears to tone had ils rise in (iennany. The ne t hod con sist- In -wallowing the juice of one b ini'ii on the first day, of two on the second day, and so on progressive up to ii s lemons. When lids limit is reached tiie number of lemons is pro pn -i\ely diiidnsherl, says the New York Herald. Mr. I), plat of Lille, ha n eentJy adopt* and tliih treatment w ith some i<f hi.- patient who suffered from articu lar rheumatism. In one case the pa ten! wa able to drop the treatment at three lemons. In another he suc ceed! and in effecting it cure at ;.’5 lemons so eoinpli te and so per- intent (hat at Ile cmll of ten months tie patient had not. one had an attack, w hen as pre viously le had suffered periodically every month. lin third case was one of ankylo , o bad that ti" patient could not dress himself without help. I o-;ay hi ha iiiino I • lit it ely recov ered the use of his limbs, anil is free from pain. M. I)' plat has also tried this mode of treatment on a patent suffering from attacks of rheumatism accom panied by disease of tbe heart, for which all means adopted hud proved merely palliative. After a few days the patient experienced a manifest re in f of the articular symptoms, but he also experienced pain in fheupfsr right side of tin- thorax, the pain be ing extremely great and tenacious. In another ease there was the same improvement, though in a lew., marked degree, and the pain in the thorax made its appearance at the end of the treatments. A third case gave the same results. Another pa th ir; suffering from rheumatism that had proved refractory to salicylate and to thyroid when treated with cit ric acid in doses of from two to ten grammes daily improved considera bly. Whatever Interpretation may be placed on the action of lemons in gen eral and citric acid it) (particular, these results are, beyond <ju< Uon, interest ing to chronicle. MAY COST IT DEAR. Pennsylvania University Likely t# Lose a Big Donation. Prof. Summerville Indlirnaot Ilecaime JUmltiiiKH Were Itemoveil from the Entrance to din* lliidillilat Temple In Museum. There are, or rather were, two pieces of .Japanese malting in the free mu seums of the University of Pennsyl vania which arc likely to cost that in stitution some thousands of dollars. On account of these mats Prof. Sam nnrville, whose donations in past years have enriched the university, has altered his will aud by a codicil cut Peunsy Lyania out of a handsome bu- lgiest. These pieces of matting used to hang tit the entrance of the Huddhist tem ple, which i a part of the Maxwell fcJommervillc collection in the west wing of the museum. Prof. Summer ville, who holds the chair of glypt ology and whose collection of precious gems which he recently donated to the university is among the rarest in the world, is also a deep student of Isud> dhisin in Japan, and has built a com plete temple in it room to the noth of Lis collection of gems. ( once ruing the exactness of detail in this temple the professor is justly proud an J extremely particular. Noth ing in t he depart meat is touched wit h ont his permission, and he is especially careful that the curators of other sec tions of the museum, such as the Amer ica n I mlian and Malay archipelago col li ti ions, shall not meddle with the sanctity of his Huddhist reproduction. Possessing siieli ideas on the subject, liis indignation was great when he returned recently after an absence of some time from the university and found that the matting had been re moved from the entrance. Just who took the strips away the professor has not told, but there is a suspicion that another section of the museum could tell if it wanted to. I In irate professor brooded over the indlgn i\ for some time, and then de • ided to change his will. He did this, lie stated to a friend, because he did not think Ids work had been appre ciated. As Prof. Summerville is a very rich man and ns his work has been < entered in the university, it Is ru mored that the bequest which tlic codicil wipes away was a very large one, too large, university men say, to be > acrittced for a couple of pieces of mat I lug. NEW ELECTRIC SIGNAL. blcji himh I|m 'to He l!i| u f piled with Sy -1- in Will cli Will I ni-l 11 in 11' I oiii iii on I oil 11 oon i| Mg hi, Ai rungements have been completed by which thf s 1 <-.ainshij> Deutschland, of tin- Ila in lintg Ame rica n line, will be equipped with a system of electric night signals, which, it is said, will show any letter or number m visibly that ii <'llll be seen for live or six mile.* at sea. The inventor* a hie r I that not only does it offer better signal facili ties than the flare light and lantern svtcm now in use, but that it also records every signal which is traiu>- ini ll ed. lin system i s an expansion of the el eell! e carriage signals now in use at the Met i "polilan opera house, New VorK. and, like its predecessor, is the invent i<.n of Mort inter N'orden, an elee -11 i el l engineer of New York The.sip mil board will lie plaeed on each side of the grillroom roof of the Deutsch land, and (lie letters and figures will he ten feel high. It is asserted that w ith the aid of the night glass the sig nal will be visible for nearly seven miles. In di eribinp bis intention, Mr. Nor den -aid; “It is many times quicker than the other methods now in use, and opportunities for mistakes are greatly lessened. One advantake which was 1111ii■ kly recognized by the steam thip i ompii nies was the value of the n i onl of signals which can be kept. Sneh records would pul a stop to all 1 • 1 11: ■ 11 1 y disputes over ipllslions win tinf or not certain signals had been sent.” PARISIANS SEEK CHEAP LIGHT. All • ttiirl Hr I nic Minis In lljive Mu -111 <-1 1 >n I < nu nsi I Hs.lliss I tin rue fur I. Issl r Ist t )'. \fter a at niggle for cheaper gas T’ai i iaiis him now turned Iheiralten tinn to ehen|>er electricity. In the original eoneessionn to the electric light companies the maximum price was fixed at 15 centimes a hectowatt, but Hie companies by charging for meters, eonneetions, etc., have man aped to create a charge to the extent of DM) francs a year. In renewing the e mlraet the municipal council pro pose to pet even by fixing the maxi mum price at eight centimes and elim inating tlie incidental charges. Worthy Sus<miir of Uliilulsr W u. Mthough the diplomatic circles at Wa h npti.ii lost a treasure in Wii 'I .up fmip. tin late Chinese minister, hi' place is likely to be well tilled by Ids suceessor, Sir Liang-rheng. I hat distinguished oriental will soon Hiarry file daughter of Vll-Kelig, the < him e minister at Paris. She is k- year old and lias lived for the last thi <i years at her father’s b'ga tion, being almost as well known in Parisian society as Mine. Wu was in Washington. SlilUin'a MrcnijiiUM Life. As things n . look, says the Chi- I'l l’') Record 111-raid, tile preM lit sul tan of Morocco may be glad to get a job at tbe St. Louis exposition or nny other pho-e that i :i good mg distance fioui .Morocco, FOUL AIR IN RAILROAD CARS. Something Which Afford* Expert* on Ventilation an Opportunity to DUtlugnUb Thennelve. A great many people have a way of talking of how sleepy traveling makes them. They say that they cannot be long in a railway train and remain awake. This phenomenon is attrib uted somehow to the act of travel ing, but the plain fact is that it is due to more or less asphyxiation, says the Hartford Courant. The car needs not to be in motion. It is enough to enter it and begin upon the experience. Whoever does travel much has to be struck with the shocking condition of the atmosphere in whatever car he may enter. It is the first thing one thinks of when be passes the door. Then he looks about and secs how many of the passengers are drooping in their scats, more or less doped, and all of them used up. Now the whole trouble is with the ventilation of the car. There is no other human habitation, not even the theaters and the churches, that begins to be so ill or so little ventPutcd as the railroad car. This is not right. For much of the time the car is in mo tion, and there must be some easy way to change the air in a moving chamber. The closeness and discomfort of the Pullman are attributable to the indi rect n flue nee of the warm climate of Africa. That country is put in con trol of the car, and proceeds to estab lish ti e African climate there. Hut other cars fare little better. r J hey are all of them devoid of ventilation, all of them stuffy and unhealthy, and all of them a discredit to the makers and managers. There ought to be some sensible crank on ventilation (most of the ventilation cranks are so ultra as to escape the charge of being sensible) to open a reasonable agitation on the subject that shall compel attention to the present pernicious conditions and secure improvement. VIRTUES OF THE ESKIMO DOG. Au Invplnnhle Servant mill Food lle •ervr lu Hie People of the Frozen North, Of the Eskimo dog I could write a book. In all probability descended from the wolf, it is the Eskimo’s one domestic animal, hut is of us much value to him as all the domesticated animal* of more favored races put to gether, writes Commander Robert E. Peary, in Leslie's Monthly. It drags him and his family and their chattels from place to place, hauls to his door llie meat of seals or walrus; leads him with unerring scent to the tiny ori fice in the snow, which indicates the breathing hole of a seal; drags him for miles in pursuit of the bear, and Anally brings the huge brute to bay; rounds up the musk-oxen till his mas ter can come up for the kill, and then, perchance, in the darkness of some long winter night, when the hand of hunger grips the settlement relent lessly, he yields up his life to feed his master and his family, and his coat to keep them warm. Though mixed now with other strains, so that black and reddish and spotted dogs are to be seen as well as the pure-blooded grays and whites, this animal still retains to a large degree the strength, endurance and fierce lust for blood when in pursuit of game that chnraeferiy.es its wild ancestors. Combined with these trails are an intelligence and faithfulness that make many of these animals the peer of any of their more favored brothers in more genial climates. ALMOST A NONDESCRIPT. When a Srcunil I.lt- ill <• nnn t (ii'li Mur rll-il Ilia Slnii<lliiu llli .Superior Officer* Suffer*. To the commanding officers, the married second lieutenant is almost a nondescript. There is never the in terest felt in the youngster there would he if he were free or without domestic eutungleincnt. From the start they know what his trials are to he. They know he has all he can do without having the at lent ions of high er officers directed to his struggles. They do not take the same interest in his advancement, because they know full well there is the weight of outside cares that will interfere with Hie single interest which every com manding officer desires in the career of the young officers, says Town Top ics. It is enough that they learn first how to be soldiers without learning at the same time how to be husbands. They think one "boss” is enough for the little lieutenant. The orders of one are bound to conflict with the or ders of the other. The military “boss” will not go to the dninestie boss to see that orders arc curried out, but the domestic boss never hesitates for a minute to go to the highest ranking general if she feels that her rights are trodden upon. It is sometimes very wonderful, the colossal courage of the young wife who is just learn ing military discipline. She dares to do and to say what the older cam paigners never dream of doing or saving, And that is another block in the career of the infant officer. A l*iil Imli Wiir Kuril, It has just been discovered that I lie i e exists at Kapperswyl, Switzer land, a fund consisting of nearly $50.- (too, which has been subscribed by Coles in various parts of the world for the purpose of waging war on Cu ia when a propitious time shall arrive. ( nlia's Corn Crops, Four crops of corn are produced yeai ly in Cuba. The first crop is planted in December, and the fourth crop is harvested in December. OLD MAIDS AS LISTENERS. Patient Soul* into Wliuif Far* the Countie** Confidence* of Oth er* Are Poured. The good listeners, on the other hand, are the old maids to whose speech nobody pays any attention, yet to whom everybody talks, writes Miss Lillie Hamilton French, in Cen tury. And I wonder, considering how many confidences men have poured into their ears, and how. many other things men have found to say about them, that not a gentleman has yet been found good and gener ous enough to pay tribute to this surpassing excellence in spinsters— an excellence so dear to the mascu line mind. How many old-maid aunts, indeed, have nephews rot be guiled? How many old-maid sisters have not opened their ears to the self-praise of their unsuccessful brothers who have missed a hearing at. the bar, or in the pulpit, or wher ever there was competition among men? Patient souls, these old maids, lis tening to each of us as a mother only listens to her own, and who have listened so long that at last they have the air of never expecting anyone to pay attention to them. They venture into speech on their own account, as timid mice into par lors. ready on the instant to whisk about and seek cover again. These, though, are the old maids for whom corners are never lacking, so eager are the very least among men to assure themselves of a hearing some where. ORIGIN OF “CHESTNUT.” The Term May Hi- Traced lo Kdwln A. Abbey, (he Celebrated Portrait Painter. The word “chestnut” as an expres sive bit of slung has been of doubtful origin ever since it was first intro duced into the English language a dozen or fifteen years ago, and, al though the Century dictionary gives it a place, and numerous explanations have been offered in extenuation of its existence as a credited word, its origin has ever been in doubt, says the Phila delphia Record. According to a Phila delphia art patron the use of the word as typifying a passe story may be traced to Edwin A Abbey, the artist, who, since studying at the academy of fine arts in this city, has arisen to tin 1 prominence of pointing a picture of the coronation of King Edward VII. nt the king's command. After leaving Philadelphia for New York Mr. Abbey was a prominent member of the Tile club, and at the meetings he always fold the same story. It was a point less story about a man who had a chestnut farm, who never made any money because he couldn’t resist the temptation to give his crop away. Mr. Abbey always Legnn this story in a different way, but would gradually lead up to it until bis hearers would recognize it and cry: “Chestnuts!” And in that way, according to the art patron, the word gradually assumed its slang significance. ANTIPATHIES OF PEOPLE. Stranice Klfpeta of C ertnln Sensation* and Sight* I lion Mervoim P era on*. “Unaccountable,” said a physician, according to the Philadelphia Record, “tire the antipathies of some people. Do you know that I have had for pa tients a dozen men who would faint on being shut up in a room with any sort of large bird? “There is a certain odd nervous dis ease which creates an aversion to eggs —so strong an aversion that an egg placed on tin- skin of one of the af flicted persons brings on convulsions. “On some higWy-organized consti tutions nose-bleed is produced in the strangest way. The medical books tell of Chesne, secretary to Francis 1., who bled at the nose on sight of an apple, and of Diego Rodriguez, a Cuban recently deceased, who would bleed at the nose whenever he smelt the flower of the heliotrope. “The sight, of raw (ish gives some people a fever. The proximity of a cat gives some a headache. The sight of blood but this is common mikes some swoon. The touch of velvet gives some a violent chill. “These cases 1 have cited are well authenticated. They arc interesting. Wo doctors arc always very glad to come upon them.” CONDUCTOR'S HONEST RAKEOFF Take* In Mnn y Coln* wllh I* re in In nm ou Tin-in mid ’l*iirna Tlirm l Good Account. A conductor of a Sixth avenue car, during a lull in the ringing of fares, stood passing coins from one hand to the other, turning up the date of each coin as he did so, relates the New York Times. “There are more ways of making money than by 'knocking down' fares,” he remarked, noting the inquiring look on a pas senger's face. "Any greenhorn can pocket a dozen nickels in collecting 120 fares in a car built for 48 pas sengers, but a man lias got to know something to spot a coin that has a premium value. It’s surprising how many more or less rare coins pass current without falling into the hands of someone who knows their value. This was suggested to me one day, and I took to studying the catalogues of dealers in rare coins and memorizing the dates of those that are worth more than the prices stamped on them. Since then 1 have picket! out of the money 1 have taken in fun s several hundred coins with a premium value ranging from a few cents to five dollars, and have re deemed them with my own money and sold f'cm to dealers in coins." ONE MAN’S HOBBY. He Think* That No Child Should Be Given More Than One Name and Ulve* Heaaona. “I Lave a friend, a most amiable and accomplished man, who has a hobby that he seems never to tire of,” said Mr. VV. A. Villiers, of New York, to a Washington Post re porter. “His hobby is that no child should be given u double name. He says that two given names are not only unnecessary, but a positive handicap in the battle of life. He will talk all day long on this head if he can only get an auditor, and will reenforce his argument by instancing departed great ones who only bore one name. “George Washington, Thomas Jeffer son, James Madison, Alexander Hamil ton, Henjamin Franklin, and scores ol others, are cited to prove that the single name suffices, and that in fact it is vastly to be preferred. A man who is very much in earnest and who can make a good presentation of his cause never lacks disciples, and so my friend has created an im pression in his circle of acquaint ances by reiteration of his theory, In fact, not long ago quite a worthy citizen, who fell under his spell, be came convinced of the danger of the double name and concluded to elimi nate one. Those of us who are in doubt are waiting to see if any good luck will follow the amputation, and should it, we may conclude to do likewise.” LEFT-HANDED BARBERS. Moat Men Have a Creepy Feeling When Cniler Ike Edge of Their Kacur*. “I have struck all kinds of barbers in my trips about the country,” said the man who travels, relates the New York Times, "but the one kind that always makes me feel us if I was balanced on the very brink of eterni ty is the left-handed barber. 1 have been shaved by several of their class in the past year. They have been good barbers, too, every one of them, but no matter how well they knew their business they always gave me a bad turn, and every time they drew the razor across my face 1 felt us if life and 1 were about ready to part company. Of coupse it is foolish, but nowadays when I find myself assigned to a left-handed barber 1 leave the shop on some pretext oi other and go elsewhere to be beauti fied. Other men whom I have sound ed on the subject have confessed to the same weakness, and women have told me that they have a like unexplained dread of left-handed hairdressers. In tue dressmaking business, too, I am told, a left handed cutter and fitter is pretty sure to give the customer a crop oi goose flesh, while even a harmless occupation like manicuring can al ways be relied on to produce real shivers if pursued by a person whose cleverness lies in her left hand.” ICONOCLASTS IN HAVANA. The Clty’ii Old Landmarks Are Glv iuK Way lu Many Modern Im pro vemeu ti. The city of Havana is rapidly being made a modern city in such a way that it will soon be so that the many sights which draw tourists from the United States to Cuba will be removed, say# a correspondent of the Baltimore American. The old landmarks, such at the old city walls, which are always a sight of great interest to all tourists us showing old Spanish architecture, and are almost worth their weight in gold to the city us drawing curds to tourists, are fast being refuoved, and the stone sold for a mere pittance to contractors. At the present time the old city wall at the Puuta and its sur roundings known as Lon Fosos, where the reconceutrados of Gen. VVeylei were herded together, are being re moved. This always used to command the attention of tourists, and none ever left the city without insisting on see ing the Fosos. Now nothing remains of the place but a modern driveway, a thing that can Ml* seen in every mod ern city in the United States. The old city walls between Zulueta and iMonserrate street are also being rap idly removed and being sold for build ing stone." MOSQUITOES HARD TO KILL. KkK That llvf Ueen Drpoilted lu I’tiiidw That Dry I'p Live (or Many Mouth*. Dr. T. W. Dupree, who has been mak ing investigation of mosquitoes ir Louisiana, has reported to the Louis iana Society of Naturalists that he has found that the eggs of mosquitoes often hatch months after they are laid, especially if they are deposited in ponds which subsequently dry up, re ports the New Yrk Sun. The conclusion reached Dr. Du pree is that the methods which have been used in getting rid of the mosqui toes by oiling or otherwise treating the ponds during March ami April, when the eggs are supposed to be hatching, are productive of little ben elit, as the hatching is going on al! the time. Dr. Dupree found 24 varieties of mosquitoes in Louisiana ponds, most of them in the same ponds. The spe cies vary from year to year, some va rieties being abundant one year and others the next. Good, (or Editor. An Indianapolis editor lately shot a large deer in the Maine woods with an old-fashioned shotgun which he had in a spirit of fun loaded with a good charge of powder and a few pebbles picked fiouk the bed of a stream. DR. TURBIN Of Berlin, Germany, the Expert Specialist and Surgeon Who has visited Manitowoc for the past SIX YEARS Once a Month, will again be in Manitowoc. Friday, January 30th AT THE WILLIAMS HOUSE. DQ. TURBIN, Business Men wm Akjß €HH“ All Cases He Undertakes Guaranteed. VnilNir. MFNi 11 Too are troubled with I'-'*-'*”'-' I" 1 -** nervous debility, slupld ness, or are otherwise unfitted for buslnes" or study, caused from youthful errors or excesses, you should consult this specialist at ones. Don't delay until too late. MIDDLE-AGED AND OLD MAKIKIMH There are thousands of you lvl/Altll\iriLA troubled with weak, aching backs and kidneys and other unmistakable signs of nervous debility. Many die of this diffi culty, ignorant of the causa. The most obstinate oases of this character treated with unfailing success, AI I HKFAAFt ot delicate nature—ln- UIJL/ajLJ Summations and kindred t-oubles—quickly curedSvitbont pain or inuon t dnience. fATAppH which poisons the breath, 1 ”'V\ I 1 stomach and lungs and paves the way for Consumption, also Throat, Liver, AnHW DATVTC I Ist—Thp doctor gives his ron ruin I0 I 2d-All business conducted Id—Names and pictures never published unless are his friends. WRITF your troubles if living away from city. Th msands cured at home by correspondence II HI I u and medicine sent as directed. Absolute secrecy in all professional dealings. Address !' Istters, giving street and number plainly. Send stamps for list of questions. DOCTOR TURBIN, 103 Randolph St., Chicago, 111. THE EQUITABLE LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY... of the United States. W. E. TEN BROECK, General Mgr. j or Wisconsin and Northern Michigan. Suite 602-606 Pabst Building. MILWAUKEE. WIS. Tbt Strongest Financial Institution In Iba World Is Ibo Equitable Ufa. INCORPORATED IN 1889. Surplus, Over $71,000,000 Assets, Over $331,000,000 Assurance in Force, Over $1,179,000,000 The Equitable will write for you a contract that will cover any contingency that may arise. It will protect a partner's Interest lu bis linn. It will grant any beneficiary, you may select a stipu lated Income for life, it will sell you Gold Bonds bearing 5 I‘kr t'KNT, Net, on the Installment plan, and agree to cancel any unpaid Installments In case von die before making the full number of payments, without affecting your title to the bonds. Call upon or address A. J. SCHLOERB, District Agent. MANITOWOC, SHEBOYGAN Wonted a Rrertpl. An old colored mammy who was taking her first, ride in the trolley cars saw the folks seated near her get transfers when they had paid their fare. When the conductor came for her fare she handed it to him, and he passed on. Then mammy called out; “Say, yo’ man, why fo’ yo’ don’ gib me a receipt fo’ my money same as yo’ gib dem white folks? Yo’ ought to be ’shamed l o’ j'o’sef to treat a po’ole cnllud 1 woman dut er way.”—Baltimore American. The Pilot for job work DAILY EXCURSIONS TO CALIFORNIA Through first-class and Tourist Sleeping Cars to points In California and Oregon every day In the year from Chicago. 5 PERSONALLY CONDUCTED EXCURSIONS EVERY WEEK. LOWEST RATES, SHORTEST TIME ON THE ROAD, FINEST SCENERY, VARIABLE ROUTES. You can leave home any day In the week and travel In tourist cars on fast trains through to the coast. For descriptive pamphlets and full information Inquire of nearest agent. Chicago & North-Western Railway. Go to The Pilot for Job work. Heart, Kidney, Bladder and all constitutional and internal troubles: also Rupture, Piles, Fistula, Dyspeps'a, Diarrhoea and all diseases of the stomach and bowels treated far In ad vance of any institution in the country. BLOOD AND SKIN JJ",VVIi3£ Scrofula, Tumors, Tetter, Eoisma and Blood Poison thoroughly eradicated, Itavlng the sys tem in n strong, pure and healthful state. I AHIFC If you are suffering from persistent Headache, Painful Menstruation, Uterine Displacements, Pains In Back, and feel as If it were impossible for you to endure your troubles and still be obliged to attend your household and social obligations. There are many women doing this to-day. However, a ;reat many have taken treatment of this jpe oiaiist, and ho can refer you to those who have been cured by him. Give the doctor a call. Be can give ell the encouragement in the world and will cure you If you trust yourself to bis care. personal attention to each individual case, on a professional basis and strictly confidential. requested to do so. 4th—The doctor's patient* Primitive Vehicles. In Chili. A recent report from. United States Consul Mansfield at Valparaiso does not convey a favorable impression of the progress of mechanical science in Chili. Most of the vehicles used in that country, he says, are primitive in design and crude in construction. Clumsy two-wheeled carts, in most in stances without springs, are general ly used, in the country districts oxen draw the carts, the yokes by which the animals are attached resting on their heads just back of the horns, where they are fastened by strips of rawhide. As t heir heads are deprived of freedom of action, the oxen some times suffer torture from the jarring of the heavy carts. Carts similar in design, but lighter, and furnished with shafts, are drawn by horses in the cities. In town and country alike, goods are commonly transported on the backs of horses and mules, — Youth’s Companion. CITY LOTS. We have desirable residence lots on easy terms. MANITOWOC LAND & SALT CO. Dealers in — 1 Coal, Wood and Masonry Supplies. Quay Street, East of Eighth St PHONE 37